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<title>LECTURERS’ PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES IN EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND EDUCATION PROGRAMMES, AND PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS’ STIMULATION SKILLS IN SOUTHWEST, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2026</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 19:10:04 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T19:10:04Z</dc:date>
<item>
<title>LECTURERS’ PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES IN EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND EDUCATION PROGRAMMES, AND PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS’ STIMULATION SKILLS IN SOUTHWEST, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2027</link>
<description>LECTURERS’ PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES IN EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE AND EDUCATION PROGRAMMES, AND PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS’ STIMULATION SKILLS IN SOUTHWEST, NIGERIA
LEWIS, Felicia Oluwatoyin
Stimulation Skills (SSs) are those practices used by teachers in engaging children to learn.&#13;
Reports have shown that many preschool teachers are deficient in SSs in the South-west,&#13;
Nigeria. Past studies were mainly interventions to improve SSs, with little focus on the&#13;
lecturers’ pedagogical practices in the Colleges of Education (CoEs). Therefore, this study&#13;
was designed to determine the pedagogical practices (preparation for lectures; sourcing and&#13;
use of instructional resources; lecture development and delivery; and development and use&#13;
of assessment tools) of Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) lecturers as correlates&#13;
of pre-service teachers’ SSs in the CoEs in the South-west, Nigeria.&#13;
The study was hinged on Lev Vygotsky’s Social Constructivist and Ivan Pavlov’s&#13;
Behaviourist theories, while the mixed methods (QUAN + qual) type of triangulation&#13;
design was adopted. The multi-stage sampling procedure was used. Five of the six state&#13;
CoEs that had ECCE up to 300 level were purposively selected. The simple random&#13;
sampling technique was used to select one CoE from each states. The 21 lecturers and 116&#13;
pre-service teachers in the Department of ECCE in the selected CoE were enumerated. The&#13;
Instruments used were ECCE Pre-service Teachers’ Observation Schedule (r=0.72), ECCE&#13;
Lecturers’ Course Material and Assessment Tools Scale (r=0.80) and ECCE Lecturers’&#13;
Instructional Resources Observation Checklist (r=0.71). In-depth interviews were&#13;
conducted with five ECCE lecturers and five pre-service teachers. The quantitative data&#13;
were analysed using descriptive statistics and Pearson product moment correlation at 0.05&#13;
level of significance, while the qualitative data were thematically analysed.&#13;
Lecturers’ educational attainment were Ph.D. (28.6%), M.Phil. (4.8%), M.Ed. (57.2%) and&#13;
others (9.6%), while (80.2%) of the pre-service teachers were female. The quality of the&#13;
lecture materials prepared by the lecturers ( = 2.04); the extent to which lecturers use&#13;
instructional resources ( = 1.23); the extent to which lecturers adopted student-centred&#13;
strategies ( = 1.60) and the quality of pre-service teachers’ lesson plan ( = 1.67) were&#13;
low against the threshold of 2.50. The assessment tools utilisation by the lecturers showed&#13;
that cognitive-based ( = 1.50) and physical-based ( = 1.50) were fairly used against the&#13;
threshold of 2.50. There was a significant positive relationship between lecturers’ lecture&#13;
planning skills (r= 0.50) and pre-service teachers’ stimulation skills. Lecturers’ sourcing&#13;
and use of instructional resources, utilisation of student-centred strategies as well as&#13;
development and use of assessment tools had no significant relationships with pre-service&#13;
teachers’ SSs. The pre-service teachers were not exposed to the delivery of child-centred&#13;
instructional methods for children. The lecturers hardly used instructional resources to&#13;
deliver their lectures.&#13;
Lecture planning skills of lecturers influenced the stimulation skills of pre-service teachers&#13;
in colleges of education in the South-west, Nigeria. Pre-service teachers in early childhood&#13;
care and education department should be exposed to these strategies
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Aug 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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